>>14241954Yes.
It may be partially due to genetics, but what those genetics are doing is simply making your eyes adaptable (unless you were born with obvious defects).
The main problem is staring at closeup for long periods of time, which puts the ciliary body under stress, since the eye are only at rest when gazing at infinity. This strain eventually turn into tightness and the lens can no longer easily flat naturally.
This kind of myopia is called psedomyopia. Still realtive easy to address.
Then there's the second problem, you got pseudomyopia and went to the eye doctor, got the glasses and as told to use them 24/7. Because you're using lenses targeted to see at infinity, now you're powemassacring your ciliary muscles on a whole new level. In time, your eyes will elongate.
This is called lens-induced myopia.
Reverting the damage is not impossible, at least I've been succeeding with reduced lens method, but very slow.
The accomodative power to focus on faraway stuff is much less impressive than what our eyes can do for clsoeup.
Once it takes more time to focus than to blink, you lose this ability. It's the reason your eyes burn so badly when looking at blurry stuff without blinking too soon.
Spend more time in that state and your visual cortex will stop trying to focus the distance. because it hurts and can't compelte attempt.